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What does a student learn in ?

These are the years health class shifts from following rules to making real choices. Students learn how friends, family, and screens shape the way they eat, sleep, and treat their bodies. They practice speaking up when something feels wrong and finding trustworthy answers instead of guessing. By spring, students can set a small health goal, name who influenced a choice, and explain the steps they took to reach it.

  • Healthy choices
  • Influences on health
  • Communication skills
  • Goal setting
  • Finding reliable information
  • Speaking up
Source: Maine Maine Learning Results
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Healthy habits and the body

    Students start the year learning what keeps a body healthy: sleep, food, movement, handwashing, and brushing teeth. They build a working vocabulary for talking about how they feel and what their body needs.

  2. 2

    Spotting influences on choices

    Students notice what shapes their choices, from family routines to ads, friends, and screens. They begin to see the difference between a choice they made and a choice that was nudged by someone else.

  3. 3

    Trusted sources and people

    Students learn where to go for honest health information and which adults to ask for help. They practice telling a reliable source, like a doctor or school nurse, from a random website or video.

  4. 4

    Talking it out with others

    Students work on the everyday conversations that keep them safe and well: saying no, asking for help, listening, and handling disagreements with a friend or sibling without things blowing up.

  5. 5

    Making decisions and setting goals

    Students walk through a simple decision-making process and pick a small health goal, like drinking more water or getting to bed earlier. They check their progress and adjust as the weeks go on.

  6. 6

    Speaking up for health

    Students put it all together by practicing healthy behaviors at school and home and speaking up for others. They might encourage a classmate, share a safety tip, or ask their family to try something new.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 3.
Health Education
  • Use functional knowledge of health concepts to support health and well-being of…

    Grades 3-5

    Students take what they've learned about health and use it in real situations, like washing hands to stop germs from spreading or knowing when to tell an adult someone is hurt.

  • Analyze influences that affect health and well-being of self and others

    Grades 3-5

    Students look at what shapes health choices, like friends, ads, and family habits, and think about how those influences affect themselves and the people around them.

  • Access valid and reliable resources to support health and well-being of self…

    Grades 3-5

    Students learn to find trustworthy sources of health information, like a doctor, a school nurse, or a reliable website, and use what they find to take care of themselves and help others.

  • Use interpersonal communication skills to support health and well-being of self…

    Grades 3-5

    Students practice how to speak up, listen, and respond respectfully when a conversation involves health, feelings, or helping someone they care about.

  • Use a decision-making process to support health and well-being of self and…

    Grades 3-5

    Students practice a step-by-step process for making choices that protect their health and the health of people around them. They learn to think through options before acting.

  • Use a goal-setting process to support health and well-being of self and others

    Grades 3-5

    Students pick a health goal, like exercising more or getting enough sleep, then map out the steps to reach it. They also think about how their goal can help a friend or family member, not just themselves.

  • Demonstrate practices and behaviors to support health and well-being of self…

    Grades 3-5

    Students practice habits like handwashing, staying active, and getting enough sleep to keep themselves healthy. They also learn how small everyday choices can affect the people around them.

  • Advocate to promote health and well-being of self and others

    Grades 3-5

    Students practice speaking up for healthy choices, for themselves and for the people around them. That might mean encouraging a friend to get enough sleep or asking a trusted adult for help.

Common Questions
  • What does health class actually cover in these years?

    Students learn habits that keep them well: eating, sleep, exercise, hand washing, safety, and getting along with others. They also start thinking about feelings, friendships, and how ads or friends shape choices. Most lessons are practical and tied to everyday life.

  • How can a parent help at home in just a few minutes a day?

    Talk through small choices out loud. At breakfast, ask what makes a meal balanced. Before bed, ask what helped or hurt their mood that day. These short conversations do more than a worksheet because they connect health ideas to real life.

  • What should be in place by the end of fifth grade?

    Students should name basic habits that keep them healthy and explain why each one matters. They should set a small goal, like drinking more water, and track it for a week. They should also know who to ask for help and how to say no kindly but firmly.

  • How is health different from PE?

    PE is mostly movement and skills. Health is the thinking part: how the body works, how feelings affect choices, and how to find trustworthy information. The two support each other but cover different ground.

  • What is the best way to sequence units across the year?

    Start with personal habits like sleep, food, and hygiene, since students can practice these right away. Move into feelings, friendships, and communication in the middle of the year. Save decision-making, goal-setting, and advocacy for spring, when students can apply earlier units.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Decision-making and finding reliable information. Students can list steps but freeze when a real situation comes up, especially with peers. Short role-plays and quick checks on whether a website or ad is trustworthy give more traction than another worksheet.

  • What if a child asks a hard question about bodies, feelings, or safety?

    Answer plainly and briefly, then ask what made them wonder. Honest, calm answers build trust and make it easier for them to come back later. It is fine to say a topic is private to the family or that the answer will wait until after dinner.

  • How can advocacy be taught without it feeling forced?

    Tie it to something students already care about, like recess safety, kindness in the lunchroom, or screen-time limits. Have them write a short note to a real audience, such as the principal or a younger class. Small, real asks teach the skill better than big abstract projects.

  • How do families know a child is ready for middle school health?

    Students can explain a healthy habit and why it matters, set a small goal and stick with it for a few days, and tell a trusted adult when something feels wrong. They can also question what they see in ads and online instead of believing it right away.